How the Health Rosetta can help

Improve your financial performance

Improve the quality of care for employees

Help employees spend less out-of-pocket

Better for you. Better for your employees.Better for your community. Better for America.

CEO's Guide to Restoring the American Dream

An inside look at how public and private employers and unions around the country are reducing their spending 20-40% while improving the quality of care, illuminating the path to follow their successes.

Improve your financial performance

It's estimated by organizations such as PwC and the Institute of Medicine that 30-50% of all health care spending is waste, fraud, or abuse. If health care is 20% of your payroll expenses, this is is like a 6-10% perpetual payroll tax on your competitiveness.

We've all had terrible customer experiences in the health care system. Much of this poor experience is the result of poor design. Uncoordinated, improperly incentivized individuals and organizations results in a jumbled mess for patients.

At best, this distracts your employees, reducing their productivity. At worst, it results in them receiving incorrect, improper, or lack of care that can seriously harm them.

Organizations around the country, big and small, rural and urban, public sector and private, have tackled this by implementing key strategies, solutions, and benefits design changes.. The Health Rosetta simplifies adopting their best practices.

As costs have gone up, employers have had to shift more costs to employees, despite spending more on payroll than ever. It's consuming 79% of all household income growth and is on track to consume 50% of all household income by 2021.

The Wall Street Journal reported that middle-class family spending on health care has increased 25% since 2007 alone.

Organizations around the country, big and small, rural and urban, public sector and private, have tackled out-of-pocket costs with far more nuanced and effective solutions than blunt force high-deductible health plans that often cause patients to forego care.